Friday, January 22, 2010

North American Housing Price Report for January

Our North American Housing Price Index registered a modest 1.67% increase from December, supported by a rise at the bottom of the market. The drop from May - when we started the Index - is now 14.46%, representing a massive fall in the North American housing markets, and likely correlated by a similar drop in the valuation of bank mortgage portfolios. On an annualised basis the Index suggests the market is down 21.69%, a truly stunning loss.

In the United States, IRS requirements have made claiming the house purchase tax credit rather arduous. This will put a damper on the 'no-money-down' schemes that were being used to have the tax credit stand in for a down payment. Apparently government-backed loans are now about 90% of the market in the US and essentially all in Canada (where many borrowers are having the nasty surprise of balloon notes coming due without any means to refinance them).

The cumbersome tax credit, along with the spectre of interest rate hikes in the future - thus influencing the interest rate on mortgages - will likely collude to continue depressing house prices across the continent. Simply put, the North American housing market is now stuck wheezing in the cold, heavy iron-lung of the state. The crash may be very prolonged, with Governments desperately attempted to prop up prices which should be falling.

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